Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, . Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties. e VOL, 94. -- NO. 158 Boe Per' Weak ore Bellvered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1965 Weather Report Sunny with cloudy periods. Scattered thundershow-. ers. Warmer. Low tonight, 62. High Friday, 72. TWENTY-TWO PAGES CARDIN (WITH FAVREAU): DORION CASE FIRST TASK PM Vows Prevention If Dupis Runs Again 0 WA (CP)--Prime Min-|report in the Montreal Gazette ister Pearson said today if for-|that Mr. Dupuis had stated he mer minister without portfolio|/intends to contest his Quebec Yvon Dupuis seeks re-election|riding of St. Jean-Iberville-Na- he will he opposed in his con-jpierville in the next election. stituency 'by an official Liberal} At St. John's, Que., earlier candidate. this week, Mr. Dupuis was or- The prime: niinister told ajdered to stand trial on charges press conference he had read alof conspiring to "demand, ac- Nazis Lose Mailing Rights As Tremblay Seals Order OTTAWA (CP) -- Postmas-linsulting, insolent and offensive, ter General Tremblay today|both in language and content," made binding an interim orderjan announcement from the post) prohibiting the use of mailloffice said. | services for two men and an or-| Mr. Tremblay used his pow- ganization found by a reviewjers as postmaster general in board to be distributing hate literature against Jews. Affected are David Stanley, 20, of Vancouver and formerly of Scarborough in Metropolitan Toronto, and John Ross Taylo~, 52, national leader of the Nat- ural Order, of Gooderham, Ont. A review board which studied the case last month found the literature they were distributing through the mails constituted "an intemperate attack, con- demnation and vilification of the Jewish faith itself and the Jewish people, and was abusive, Boy Threatens Queen's Death | NORTHAMPTON, England (Reuters)--A schoolboy was the} author of three anonymous let- ters threatening the Queen that made police plan extra protec- tion for her visit to Higham Ferrers near here Friday, it was disclosed today. Northamptonshire Police Chief John Gott said: "We have discovered the author of the let- ters and mm view of his age, no} further action is being taken at present ~ : The --"letters,---all__ mailed newspapers last 'Friday, said the Queen. would be '"de- stroyed" at Higham Ferrers, one of four Northamptonshire towns she is due to visit with) her husband, Prince Philip. | | to lent, May to prohibit the use of the} mails to the two men and the organization when he believed he had reasonable grounds to believe they were sending scur-| rilous material through the post} office, contrary to the Criminal| Code. PAIR APPEALS The two men appealed the or-| der and a three-member board of review was established, hold-| ing a public hearing of the case here last month. It ruled that the literature was scurrilous, after hearing witnesses for the post office, the federal justice department, and the two men. "Accepting the recommenda- tion of the board review, the postmaster general has made final the interim prohibitory or- ders,' the post office said. 'All mail posted by or addressed to David Stanley, J. R. Taylor, and the Natural Order will be marked "'non-transmissible' and} returned to the senders." In the appeal hearing 'June 14-15, Mr. 'Taylor submitted a pamphlet, The Protocol of the Elders of Zion, as what he termed evidence of a Jewish conspiracy to take over the world. A 1946 U.S. Senate sub- committee on internal security had found the protocol fraudu- John M.- Bentley,counsel for the post office, told the inquiry that two other pamphlets dis- cept or offer $10,000' in connec- tion with an attempt to obtain a racetrack franchise from the Quebec government. Mr. Pearson said Mr. Dupuis would be opposed in his riding regardless of the outcome of the trial. The prime minister declined further comment because the case was before the courts but said "since he has indicated his intentions, I thought I had bet- ter indicate mine." Mr. Dupuis, 38, a member of Parliament since 1958, was dis- missed from the cabinet in Jan- uary, Mr. Pearson was asked what} his views would be if Edmund Asselin, Liberal MP for Mont- real Notre-Dame-de-Grace, de- cided to seek re-election. The prime minister said he would have after Mr. Asselin meets Quebec Liberal party officials Mr. Asselin's financial profit in a Montreal Protestant School Board land 'deal was the sub- ject of an inquiry. Si Children All Firebugs OXNARD, Calif. (AP) -- An Oxnard couple have turned their six children over to juvenile authorities be cause, officers say, the parents claim the chil- dren all are firebugs. The four girls and two boys range in age from five to 13. Mr. and Mrs, Maurice Por- ter took the action Tuesday, po- lice said. Officers said the Por- ters complained that the chil- dren set the third fire of the week in their apartment The parents were afraid to go to sleep for fear the children would set another fire, police said. The last fire, in a closet, caused minor damage before it was extinguished. All three tributed by the organization in- vited anyone who read them to attack the Jews. He called them scandalous. fires were quickly exting- uished, police reported. Authorities are holding |children in a juvenile hall. the no comment. until} ' Dorion Case Charges Go Under Discussion LONDON (Reuters) Uproar broke out in Parlia- ment today when Prime Minister Wilson and Opposi- tion Leader Sir Alec Douglas - Home clashed over a junior minister's flight to Hanoi in an effort to get talks started on the Commonwealth's Viet Nam peace mission. Douglas - Home asked Wilson to say whether the United States was consulted first and stressed the dangers of any tendency toward appeasement in the Viet Nam crisis. The row broke out on both sides of the lower chamber when Wilson start- ed to retort. 'Should there be any question of my want- ing lessons in appeasement, I know who 5 os Fis voice was drowned by the Bridge. New Brunswi OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson announced today that tenders will be called later this year for a combined tun- nel, bridge and causeway he- tween New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. Construction is expected to start next April and, Mr. Pear- son said at a press conference, he hopes it will be completed in late 1970. The cost is estimated at $148,- 006,000. The prime minister said the "massive" undertaking will in- clude a three - mile bridge, uproar before he _ could finish his sentence. Douglas - Home, as Lord Dunglass, was with Neville Chamberlain when the then British prime minister went to Munich in 1938 for talks with Hitler. A fresh outburst came when a Labor government supporter claimed a Con- servative back-bencher had called the prime minister 'you swine." U.S. ADVISED After the Speaker inter- vened, Wilson said the United States and all other interested parties were told of the flight to Hanoi by 6: ;car-old Harold Davies, a parliamentary secretary to the pensions ministry. Davies left here Tuesday but his visit was kept secret until today, when he el, Causeway' ck ito P.E.L nearly a mile of underwater way. The nine-mile link between Jourimain Island, N.B., and Port Borden, P.E.1., will in- clude both rail and highway fa- cilities, Mr. Pearson said the first tender will be called in Decem- ber for the New Brunswick land approachés. This would be, .fol- lowed by tenders for the bridge piers, the tunnel, other cause- way sections, the Prince Ed- ward Island land approach and the steel bridge superstructure. Pound Away SAIGON (Reuters) Viet} |Cong forces poured heavy mor- jtar fire into the South Vietnam- ese provincial capital of Kon Tum Wednesday night, a mili- tary spokesman here said to- day. | There was no_ information {here about damage or casual- jties in Kon Tum, 275 miles jnorth of Saigon. The spokes- jman said government artillery lopened up in defence of the town. | Meanwhile, reports reaching here indicated the important post of Dak To, 25 miles north of Kon Tum, has fallen to the Viet Cong. A government relief force sent out from nearby Tan Canh was reported to have been am- bushed. Dak To is the second moun- tain strongpoint to pass into Viet Cong hands in less than three weeks. It commands the northern approaches to Kon Tum. Reports reaching here said Dak To seemed to have been 'overrun by a strong guerrilla force early in the morning. Communications with the local garrison were lost shortly after midnight and firing appeared to have ceased about two hours later. NO RELIEF Two weeks ago the Viet Cong jcaptured Tourmorong, north of |Dak. To. Plans to relieve it |have been abandoned. Viet Cong Surrounds City, With Mortars Nearer to Saigon, American, Australian and South Vietnam- ese troops fighting in the guer- rilla stronghold designated as zone D were reported today to have killed 20 Viet Cong, cap- tured four and seized 18 weap- ons, Zone D is an oval - shaped) jungle 100 miles long and 60 miles wide at its widest point. Allied operations in the area began two days ago in brigade strength. The thick jungle is be- lieved to conceal about 8,000 Viet Cuong troops. In Saigon today, U.S. mili- tary authorities disclosed that an F-105 fighter - bomber was shot down over North Viet Nam Wednesday. HIT FROM GROUND The plane was one of four at- tacking bridges near Vinh, 170 miles south of Hanoi, when it was hit by ground fire. The pilot parachuted from the plane but efforts to find and rescue him were unsuccessful and he was listed as missing. North Viet Nam has pro- tesied io the International Con- trol Commission about Wednes- day's landing of more than 8,000 U.S. marines near the U.S. air base at Da Nang, the North Viet Nam news agency re- ported. = North Viet Nam _ described that landing as a '"'new, most flagrant act of aggression." Members of the commission PRIME MINISTER WILSON Gunmen Shoot Deputy, Take, Free Hostages tunnel and five miles of cause-| SPRINGFIELD, Ore. (AP)-- U.K. SENDS PEACE-ENVOY TO HANOI flew into Hanoi from Vien- Both Quebec And Ontario, son and his fellow prime miniat tiane, capital of neighboring Laos. Wilson, leader of the four- man mission-which Moscow, Peking and Hanoi have re- fused to receive -- made his House of Commons statement after North Viet- namese here had disputed the basis of Davie's visit. The prime minister said: "Tt will be his job there .. . to make plain what the purpose of the Common- wealth mission is, and to get a dialogue started." The sourc-~ said Davies strictly defined job is to seek clarification of North Viet Nam's reply to the Commonwealth mission and to try to persuade the North Vietnamese to receive Wil- Two gunmen released six hos- 7 tages unharmed near Sacra- mento, Calif., Wednesday night. The search for the killers of an Oregon deputy sheriff immedi- ately switched to California, Two of those released were Mrs. David Corbin, 33, and her 12-year-old son by a previous. marriage, Clinton Clark. They had been the objects of a wide search throughout west- § ern Oregon when they disap- f peared Tuesday, soon after Deputy Sheriff Carlton E. Smith, 33-year-old father of six 7 children, was cut down by a -- blast and six pistol bul- ets, Ron Eggleston, chief criminal deputy of the Lane County sher- iff's office in nearby Eugene, said the other hostages were Mr. and Mrs, Uldis Riekstins of Seattle, their son, and their son's friend. The six checked into a weet land, Calif., motel, where FBI agents were questioning Rieks-|to give details of the kidnap- |ping or say what leads they had tins. Some Gas-Stations Reopen, But No Settlement Likely MONTREAL (CP) -- Numer- ous gasoline stations here re- opened for business today al- though no settlement was an- nounced in a dispute between oil companies and retailers that shut most of them down. The reopening here followed a split in the ranks of the prov- ince's retailers Wednes- day night that resulted in the reopening of Quebec City gaso- line stations, The retailers want a larger slice of the profit on a gallon. It was not immediately known whether stations were open in other parts of the province, Sev- eral areas north and east of Montreal and north of Quebec City had been affected by the -- which_began__Tues- ay. While members of the Gaso- line Retailers Fraternity met with oil companies in Montreal, jare Canada, Poland and India. MRS. CARLTON SMITH The FBI declined, however, in Quebec City announced a 48- hour truce during which a new offer would be made to the oil companies. Henri Roy, president of the Quebec City fraternity, de- clined to disclose contents of the proposal. He said 75 per cent of the area's 300 gasoline stations had been closed by the strike. The truce began early today and applies' only to Quebec City. Most stations in urban areas of Quebec will remain closed, a fraternity spokesman said, In the. Montreal area, a Que- bec Superior Court judge issued interim injunctions against the fraternity Wednesday on behalf of several oil companies. NO HARASSING The injunctions forbid the fraternity from harassing or in- terfering with normal business the 12-member fraternity board' of the companies. U.S. BUILDS UP, AND THE VIET CONG STEPS UP ATTACKS Viet War: Hurtling Toward An Explosion By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON (AP) -- The war in Viet Nam is moving to- ward an explosion. All the signs point to it. U.S. forces are building up. Viet Cong guerrillas are step- ping up raids and attacks. The American commander, Gen. William C.. Westmoreland, says more "substantial confronta- tions" may be expected * Westmoreland also says the Viet Cong "'are less confident of success than they were earl- jer." Meanwhile, U.S. intelligence sources helieve North Viet Nam's 325th Division, starting . early this year, has moved into ' ; Mountains east of Sp Enter T OTTAWA (CP) -- Justice de- partment officials are meeting Davies' who was an active nuclear - disarmanent cam- paigner before joining the cabinet, was first invited to Hanoi by two North Vietna- mese correspondents in Lon- don, the sources said. The correspondents were reported to have told Davies they had North Viet mamese government author- ity to invite him to Hanoi, to explain the background of the Commonwealth mis- sion. British government sources were hopeful Davies might use his personal influence to persuade North Viet Nam to receive the mission, but they were cautious about be- ing too optimistic over the outcome of his talks. cers to consider possible charges arising from the Dorion report, Prime Minister Pearson said today. He told a press conference the justice officials are meeting their Ontario counterparts today and will meet Quebec authori- ties later to review the 3,500 pages of evidence taken by Chief Justice Frederic Dorion. The Dorion inquiry investi- gated allegations against fed. eral ministerial aides of at- tempted bribery and political coercion in efforts to obtain bail for narcotics trafficker Lucien Rivard. Mr. Pearson said the meét- 'PRESSING AHEAD' He said the government is Pressing ahead as quickly as Possible with its review of thé evidence. summer reading for dence a particularly the evidence on the whereabouts of the kid- ie he Fake eae tie tee nappers. 4 A clerk at the motel stidingtemee One Mrs. Corbin, Mrs. Riekstins andj e. three youths had. gone. to id. Near Marion Forks , east of Springfield, her car be- _ came mired in the mud. The gunmen commandeered the camper truck of the Riekstins, and evaded police patrols into California, 100 miles to the) TORONTO (CP) -- Board of south, control Wednesday approved: a The gunmen fled the camper|permit allowing John Black to on foot in Sacramento, but the/speak in Allan Gardens Sunday hostages continued to Wood-jon the civil liberties of self land, Calif., before Mrs. Corbin|styled Canadian Nazi leader telephoned her Springfield home| Willliam Beattie of Toronto. to inquire about the four chil-|. At the same time, Ma dren she had left behind. Philip Givens said Metropolivan An all-points bulletin had been) Toronto Police would be alerted broadcast earlier throughout the|"ang very much in evidence" west coast states for Wilbur/to 'prevent a recurrence of Marion Grey, 30, a native of|Beattie's recent appearance at Brunswick, Ga., and Karl Clete|the park which started a riot, Bowles, 24, a native of Ama- Beatti filo, 'Tex. eattie, 23, was saved from serious injury by police who They completed terms at the Oregon prison only last week, + cthenBg rapidly to break up Grey for assault and robbery and Bowles for breaking and en-|_ A subsequent application by tering. Beattie to be heard at Allan Smith, sworn in as a deputy Gardens June 22 was denied by June 29, was nearing the com-|the board. pletion of his first night shift] Controller Margaret Camp- when he radioed from his patrol|bell said Mr. Black, a part-time car. Tuesday night: taxi driver, was not a Nazi "This is 15 at Goodpasture|/sympathizer, nor was he & and Delta intrechange. I have/friend of Beattie, but was cof- a 1959 Triumph. License 9f-6773.|cerned about civil liberties in- Ten-two." volved in the issue. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS 5 Killed; 3 Hurt As Tour-Bus Hits Truck HENIN - LIETARD, France (AP) -- Five persons were killed and 34 injured today -in the collision of a busload of British and Irish tourists and a parked truck, police reported. The bus was enroute from Paris to Ostend, Belgium. NATO Council Will Talk Viet In Paris © OTTAWA (CP) -- A meeting of the NATO council will be held in Paris next week with Viet Nam expected to be the prime topic, it was learned here today. External Affairs Minister Martin will leave here Sunday for the meeting. Car Firms Pledge $3.3 Million For Expo MONTREAL (CP) -- The Motor Vehicle Manufacturers'» Association announced Wednesday that the eight-company organization will sponsor the 25,000-seat stadium to be built at a cost of $3,300,000 at the 1967 world exhibition. James" Dykes, general of the iation, told Expo 67 Ontario and Quebec legal offi- © South Viet Nam to join the Viet Cong in the fighting. Malcolm W. Browne of The Associated Press reports from Saigon that for the last few weeks, guerrilla forces of un- precedented strength have burst across the South Vietna- mese, highlands, smashing one government post after another. "Recently, he says, thousands of South Vietnamese govern- ment troops have been killed or ¥ captured. ' \ The more the South Vietnam- ese are smashed, the more U.S. forces must get involved to bail them out Only last week guerrillas slipped through the heavy mar- ine guard surrounding Da Nang Air Base, killed one American and destroyed three U.S. planes on the ground. Monday they overran the jungle outpost of Ba Gia and made off with two 105MM how- itzers, the largest weapons they've captured yet, plus am- munition Still, there has been no big showdown between the marines and the Viet Cong or the 325th Division. But. more U.S. troops--about £000 marines--are being put ashore in Seuth Viet Nam, raising Americano military Strength there to about 60,000 men, These don't include another 16,000 to 21,000 marines and soldiers who, Defence Secre- tary Robert McNamara said in» mid-June, are being sent to Viet Nam : And, while the Uniied States builds up its ground forces, it gets deeper into the war in the air, Three times now American B-52 bombers have flown the 2,200 miles from Guam to bomb Viet Cong locations in South Viet Nam, some within 35 miles of Saigon. At the same time, American bombers continued to plaster North Viet Nam, although stay- ing away from such population centres as the capital city of Hanoi and the seaport of Hai- phong. While the American com- mander - in - chief, President Johnson, was pondering all this he learned of more unpleasant news that sooner or later may require a decision from him. Several Russian - built mis- siles sites are nearing comple- tion in North Viet Nam, near Hanoi and Haiphong. These are for surface-to-air missiles that can be used against bombers. It's possible they will never be used, unless the United States attacks those two cities. But their very presence, and the danger implicit in them, raises the question: Should the United States wipe out those missile sites before they can be used against American planes? But that might involve the United States with the Soviet Union, more or less. Johnson has to make the de- cision to bomb or lay off. But Wednesday in the House of Re- presentatives, Leader Gerald Ford of. the Republicans said the United States should bomb the missile bases before they're t officials that sponsorship of the stadium is the automotive producers' main participation in the exhibition. ' ...In THE TIMES today... Workers Reject PUC Financial Offer -- P. 11 Conservation Authority Plans Publicity Drive -- P, 5 Central Collegiate Exam Results -- P. 11 Ann Landers--14 Obits--20 City News--11 Sports--6, 7, 8 Classified--16, 17, Theotre--15 Comics--21 Whitby News--5 Editorial--4 Women's--12; 13, 14 Financial--20 Weather--2 e 18,419 a